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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> TK, R (on the application of) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2009] EWCA Civ 1550 (08 October 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2009/1550.html Cite as: [2009] EWCA Civ 1550 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
(MR JUSTICE BLAIR)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LAWS
and
LORD JUSTICE WILSON
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R (TK) |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT |
Respondent |
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Mr Steven Kovats (instructed by the Treasury Solicitors) appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Laws:
"On the substance of the matter, the applicant has drawn attention to the observations of Sedley LJ in RT (Sri Lanka) [that should be TR] to the effect that the court has to decide for itself, as a matter of precedent fact, whether or not there was a fresh claim. That was not the view of the judge, who applied the approach of this court in WM (Congo) [2006] EWCA Civ [1495] and Cakebay [1999] Imm AR 176 at 195, that the court has still to apply the Wednesbury test, albeit illuminated by the rule of anxious scrutiny. That is not, as was suggested in TR, an attitude of 'deference', but simply the application of orthodox principles of administrative law. However, there now apparently being differing views between different constitutions of the court as to the proper test to apply to this very important question, I grant permission to enable the issue to be properly reconsidered."
"When a human rights or asylum claim has been refused or withdrawn or treated as withdrawn under paragraph 333C of these Rules and any appeal relating to that claim is no longer pending, the decision maker will consider any further submissions and, if rejected, will then determine whether they amount to a fresh claim. The submissions will amount to a fresh claim if they are significantly different from the material that has previously been considered. The submissions will only be significantly different if the content:
(i) had not already been considered; and
(ii) taken together with the previously considered material, created a realistic prospect of success, notwithstanding its rejection.
This paragraph does not apply to claims made overseas.
353A. Consideration of further submissions shall be subject to the procedures set out in these Rules. An applicant who has made further submissions shall not be removed before the Secretary of State has considered the submissions under paragraph 353 or otherwise.
This paragraph does not apply to submissions made overseas."
"Anxious scrutiny has been given to the decision in LP and the effect it has on your client's case, but it has been determined that the findings by the Tribunal in LP in addition to the most recent country information, when taken together with material previously considered in your client's case, would not create a realistic prospect of success before an immigration judge."
"Given the above findings of the Adjudicator and the subsequent decision by the Immigration Appeal Tribunal, it is considered that your client will be of little interest to the authorities on his return to Sri Lanka. We believe that your client's position in the LTTE was of insufficient standing for him to now elicit the interest of the authorities. It is further considered that your client has been away from Sri Lanka for over 6 years and therefore it is unlikely that he would be of any interest to the authorities on his return. This would be the case even if there remained a record of your client's detention."
Paragraph 19:
"It is accepted that since 2003 the situation in Sri Lanka has deteriorated, with the main incidents of insecurity reported in northern and eastern districts. Having considered the objective country information, including the latest Country of Origin information reports, it is considered that your client would not be at risk of persecution. Your client is not of a sufficiently high profile to merit any adverse attention from the authorities upon return. There is nothing in the material provided that would lead the Secretary of State to believe that there is any interest in your client from the Sri Lankan authorities. Your client does not fall within the categories at risk and no evidence has been provided to demonstrate that he would be at risk now. In any event, bearing in mind your client's long absence from Sri Lanka it is considered unlikely that he would now be at risk because of his ethnicity or claimed involvement with the LTTE."
After that paragraph the Secretary of State turned to consider the question of a fresh claim and arrived at her conclusions in paragraph 21 which I have read. At paragraph 22 of his judgment the judge below concluded that the Secretary of State's judgment on the fresh claim issue could only be impugned on Wednesbury grounds and that the Secretary of State, having asked herself the right question, brought to bear a sufficient anxious scrutiny in seeking to answer it. Accordingly, held the judge, there was no basis for judicial review.
"13. Against that background, he [that is, counsel] relies on the following factors in particular. Firstly, he points at the lengthy detention to which the claimant was subjected, namely eight months; secondly, he points to the admitted ill-treatment that the claimant was subjected to; thirdly, he points to the allegation that the claimant was a 'Black Tiger'; fourthly, he points to the fact that the claimant has been a member of the LTTE; and fifthly, he points to the scarring which supports the claimant's version of events.
14. Of these, particular mention should be made of the reference to a 'Black Tiger', the name for a specially trained suicide bomber. As regards this, the claimant's evidence before the Adjudicator was that he had been accused of being such. The Adjudicator did not make a specific finding of fact in that regard, but of course, as Mr Gillespie points out, he accepted the claimant's story generally. On the other hand, as Mr Singh submits to me, if the claimant had been seriously suspected of being a specially trained suicide bomber, it is most unlikely that a bribe would have secured his escape."
"32. Although, given what has happened to his relatives, I entirely understand the appellant's subjective fear of LTTE violence if he is returned, this case concerns the question whether his fear is objectively well-founded. For the reasons given by Keene LJ I am driven to the conclusion that the appellant has no fresh claim capable of superseding the adverse decision on this issue reached by the adjudicator in 2003. I do so, however, not by standing back and asking simply whether a rational Home Secretary could have decided that there was no fresh claim, but by taking a close look at the components of the claim and of what they arguably amount to. If the court, doing this, comes to the same conclusion as the Secretary of State, well and good.
33. If not, then a difficult question will arise whether the difference of view justifies intervention. This case, for the reasons that have been given, does not concretely raise that question but Ms Chan for the Secretary of State has accepted that the Secretary of State's margin of appreciation may be slenderer in the present class of case, that is to say in fresh claim cases, than in other judicial review contexts. This is so for at least three possible reasons which I mentioned when granting permission to appeal in this case: first, the Home Secretary acts as judge in her own cause in reaching the decision under attack; secondly, the matters ordinarily relevant to whether a claim is a fresh claim are matters which a court is for the most part at least is as well equipped as the Home Secretary to deal with; thirdly, in many of these cases, and the present is a strong example, we are concerned with what are potentially matters of life and death.
34. This was essentially, as I read it, the approach both of Munby J in the present case and of Mitting J in the case of Sinnarasa v SSHD [2005] EWHC 1126 (Admin). It means, as I said when I granted permission to appeal, that there is in reality not a great deal of room for deference in the judicial exercise. The primary question for the court is whether, whatever the Secretary of State thinks of it, there is here a fresh claim capable of succeeding before an immigration judge. As I have said, the difficult question of the margin of appreciation is not for us today. But the approach, as Ms Chan herself aptly put it in response to my question, is that it is anxious scrutiny in action."
"33. These are deep waters. In my respectful view their Lordships' opinions in ZT (Kosovo) disclose two distinct approaches to the comparison between "clearly unfounded" (s.94(2)) and "[no] realistic prospect of success" (Rule 353). The first (Lord Phillips and Lord Brown) is that the tests are interchangeable. The second (Lord Hope, Lord Carswell and Lord Neuberger) is that a case which is clearly unfounded can have no realistic prospect of success, but the converse is not true: there may be a case which has no realistic prospect of success which, however, is not clearly unfounded. I venture to suggest that that represents the limit of the difference between their Lordships. Both of these two approaches are I apprehend consistent with the further proposition, expressed by Lord Neuberger at paragraph 83, that a case which is not clearly unfounded will be one which has a realistic prospect of success.
34. I do not consider, with great deference, that the reasoning in ZT (Kosovo) is of great assistance in setting the bar, as it were, for the impact of the "realistic prospect of success" test in Rule 353. For what it is worth I should have thought that there is a difference, but a very narrow one, between the two tests: so narrow that its practical significance is invisible. A case which is clearly unfounded is
one with no prospect of success. A case which has no realistic prospect of success is not quite in that category; it is a case with no more than a fanciful prospect of success. "Realistic prospect of success" means only more than a fanciful such prospect. Miss Giovanetti accepted this interpretation.
35. Adopting that approach, I would hold that a reasonable Secretary of State might conclude that the material contained in the appellant's fresh submissions – relating to her deteriorating health (including the suicide attempt, whether it was determined or not) and her increasing dependence on her sister – would enjoy more than a fanciful prospect of success before the AIT on an Article 8 appeal."
In those passages my conclusion was that there were two approaches in their Lordships' house but that the view of Lord Carswell and Lord Hope was to the effect that the tests propounded different approaches. It is implicit in this reasoning that in relation to paragraph 353 the court's supervisory role is fulfilled by a Wednesbury approach albeit tempered by the demands of anxious scrutiny. That seems to me to be the conclusion that was there reached, and it is of course consistent with earlier authority contained in WM and Cakebay.
Lord Justice Wilson:
Lord Neuberger MR:
Order: Appeal allowed